Updated 'marshmallow test' offers insight on kids' delayed gratification - USA TODAY
"Astounding" is the word that Richard Aslin, the William R. Kenan professor of brain and cognitive sciences at UR, uses to describe the results of the robust study that demonstrates that the ability to delay gratification is influenced as much by the ...
The marshmallow test, revisited - Washington Post
A team of researchers at the University of Rochester revisited the marshmallow experiment. And what they found was that the ability to delay gratification isn't just a hardwired, innate skill. Quite the opposite. Behavioral cues play a big role in ...
Helping Your Child Delay Gratification - Scientific American
Thus, the researchers note that experience factors into a child's ability to delay gratification. When previous promises have been hollow, why believe the next one?
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